Literature DB >> 1984058

Is the incubation period of AIDS lengthening?

J M Taylor1, J M Kuo, R Detels.   

Abstract

Data from a cohort study of 1,637 homosexual men in Los Angeles are used to estimate the distribution of times from HIV infection to AIDS, and to detect any changes in the distribution. We find weak, but not statistically significant, evidence that the incubation period is lengthening. When the incubation period distribution is assumed not to have changed, we estimate that the proportion developing AIDS within 6 years of HIV infection is 27%, with a 95% confidence interval of (23%, 31%). However, if we assume that the incubation period distribution began to change in July 1987, then we estimate that for individuals infected in the first half of 1979, 28% develop AIDS within 6 years, and for those infected in the first half of 1983, 25% develop AIDS in 6 years. Four different hypotheses are suggested for a lengthening of the incubation period; these are a treatment hypothesis, a cofactor hypothesis, a better health care hypothesis, and a changing virus and disease hypothesis. The statistical method used is semiparametric modeling of the joint distribution of the date of infection and the incubation period for the participants in the study. These methods, although computationally intensive, are an attractive way of analyzing data from a prevalent cohort because only minimal parametric assumptions are made.

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Mesh:

Year:  1991        PMID: 1984058

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr (1988)        ISSN: 0894-9255


  6 in total

1.  A meta-analysis of estimates of the AIDS incubation distribution.

Authors:  P C Cooley; L E Myers; D N Hamill
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  1996-06       Impact factor: 8.082

2.  Survival trees with time-dependent covariates: application to estimating changes in the incubation period of AIDS.

Authors:  P Bacchetti; M R Segal
Journal:  Lifetime Data Anal       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 1.588

3.  Is the virulence of HIV changing? A meta-analysis of trends in prognostic markers of HIV disease progression and transmission.

Authors:  Joshua T Herbeck; Viktor Müller; Brandon S Maust; Bruno Ledergerber; Carlo Torti; Simona Di Giambenedetto; Luuk Gras; Huldrych F Günthard; Lisa P Jacobson; James I Mullins; Geoffrey S Gottlieb
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2012-01-14       Impact factor: 4.177

4.  Significant reductions in Gag-protease-mediated HIV-1 replication capacity during the course of the epidemic in Japan.

Authors:  Shigeru Nomura; Noriaki Hosoya; Zabrina L Brumme; Mark A Brockman; Tadashi Kikuchi; Michiko Koga; Hitomi Nakamura; Tomohiko Koibuchi; Takeshi Fujii; Jonathan M Carlson; David Heckerman; Ai Kawana-Tachikawa; Aikichi Iwamoto; Toshiyuki Miura
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2012-11-14       Impact factor: 5.103

5.  Macrophage-tropic human immunodeficiency virus isolates from different patients exhibit unusual V3 envelope sequence homogeneity in comparison with T-cell-tropic isolates: definition of critical amino acids involved in cell tropism.

Authors:  B Chesebro; K Wehrly; J Nishio; S Perryman
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  1992-11       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 6.  Five myths about AIDS that have misdirected research and treatment.

Authors:  R S Root-Bernstein
Journal:  Genetica       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 1.082

  6 in total

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